Vicki Delany

Gold Mountain


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      Ray and some of the men had strung a banner Angus had created across the street: THE FINEST, MOST MODERN ESTABLISHMENT IN LONDON, ENGLAND, TRANSPORTED TO DAWSON. Our sign seemed to be achieving its aim. As I watched, five men came down the street, their hats and jackets thick with grime, their faces dark under unkempt beards and dust. One of them stopped and looked at the sign. He spoke to his companions, gestured to it, perhaps reading it to them, and then pointed to the door of the Savoy. As one, they nodded and trooped up the step and disappeared from my sight.

      I studied the faces on the street below. Almost all were male, with a scattering of women and even fewer children. I recognized a few of the men — those who came to the Savoy, whom I’d seen on the streets, who worked in restaurants, banks or shops which I frequented. No one from Skagway.

      It had been a year since I was there. Hundreds of men might have joined the gang since and come over the Pass with Paul Sheridan.

      He had been alone last night in the Savoy. Enjoying himself, dancing with Irene. No one in Soapy’s gang would have stood by and watched one of their fellows being evicted physically from the premises.

      It was unlikely Paul had come alone, but not impossible. Perhaps he’d had a falling out with Soapy — easy to do — and decided to strike out on his own.

      He might be on his own, but if he were here to dig for gold, I’d join a nunnery.

      I felt a prickling of unease as I remembered running into Angus at the NWMP office. Paul had approached my son. That I did not care for one bit.

      Chapter Five

      It had been only a year ago when Angus and I departed Toronto with an unseemly degree of haste. We took the first train pulling out of Union Station, paying no heed to where it was heading.

      We ended up in Vancouver in July of 1897.

      Every person we encountered was talking about nothing but gold. Yukon gold. On July 14, the steam ship Excelsior had arrived in San Francisco carrying half a million dollars worth of gold, and then on the 17th, the Portland pulled into Seattle with a million dollars worth. Newspaper headlines screamed the weight of the precious metal; store fronts were instantly covered in advertisements for the equipment one supposedly needed to go prospecting; waiters and butlers and shop clerks and policemen discarded their uniforms and walked out the door, heading for the Klondike.

      Although a great many didn’t exactly know where that was.

      Or what they would find there.

      I stood on the street corner outside our hotel while the bellboy unloaded our trunks and Angus peppered him with questions. He told Angus that his three older brothers were preparing to leave, that he wanted to go with them but his widowed mother was begging him not to abandon her.

      I watched a cart go by, laden with pickaxes, burlap bags of flour, wooden boxes stamped canned corn, and three men, the youngest of whom was seventy if a day. “Ho! The Klondike! Ho!” they cried to cheering onlookers. A group of small boys and a scrawny dog ran after them. The boys waved and shouted. The dog barked.

      The bellboy took our things into the hotel, and we followed. It wasn’t a particularly good hotel. Definitely second rate, not the sort of establishment I was accustomed to frequenting.

      Which was, of course, the point.

      I was likely being sought by one Mr. Jonathan McNally, whose wife’s jewellery was resting comfortably in the valise that never left my hand.

      * * *

      Jonathan McNally was a fat, red-faced man in his late forties who dabbled at being a banker but in truth was dependent on his mother’s family fortune. She was a daughter of one of the old-money Protestant families who controlled the financial life of Eastern Canada. Jonathan’s wife — as plump and plain as he — and their six children spent the entirety of the summer at the family vacation home on Stoney Lake. At the weekend Jonathan would travel up on the train to join his progeny. During the week, he would entertain me.

      Shortly after he had made my acquaintance over an excellent dinner at the Royal York Hotel, I told my paramour that my house had been discovered to be infested with vermin. I shuddered prettily and said that, as I was in temporary accommodation, I couldn’t possibly invite a gentleman around for an after-supper drink, now could I?

      He looked slightly unsure — they always did. Then he gave in — they always did — and said he’d be delighted to show me his home.

      One of Jonathan McNally’s virtues, for me, was that an excess of drink put him straight to sleep. I suggested brandies before retiring, and sure enough he was asleep as soon as his head hit the pillow. I left him snoring lustily and examined the house. Most specifically, his wife’s dressing room. She hadn’t taken the best of her jewels to Stoney Lake. The drawers to the desk in the library were locked but looked easy to pick.

      The weekend arrived and Jonathan, as was his custom, departed to join his family. Saturday night, I used the copy of the key I’d made from the one in Jonathan’s jacket pocket and entered the house.

      Unfortunately, the butler was up in the night. Also unfortunately, a delicate pie-crust table had been placed behind a door where it hadn’t been previously, and I knocked it over. What the butler thought he was doing upstairs in the family bedrooms when no one was in residence, I cannot imagine. Hearing the table fall, he armed himself with a candlestick and came face to face with me, dressed in trousers and a multi-pocketed working man’s jacket, all in black, exiting Mrs. McNally’s boudoir.

      The butler was not accustomed to ladies who’d been taught to fight as if in a bare-knuckle ring.

      I screamed, only half-pretending shock, dropped my sack, mumbled something about having left my late mother’s necklace behind, burst into tears, and reached out as though to weep on his chest. Instead, I grabbed him by the shoulders of his night attire, pulled him toward me, and drove my knee deep into his jewels. He screamed, I let go and stepped back. He bent over, protecting his vitals, overcome with pain. I brought my knee in again, this time driving it into his face. His nose burst in a spray of hot, sticky blood.

      I ran, having the presence of mind to first pick up my bag.

      I estimated I had sufficient time to collect my things and my son and get out of town. Fearful of the possibility of scandal, or the rage of the elder Mrs. McNally, the butler wouldn’t call the police without his employer’s authorization. And even then, McNally might not be too welcoming of the sort of questions the authorities would ask. Such as how I’d obtained a key and knew the layout of his house.

      He’d told me they didn’t have a telephone at the lake. Something about Mother objecting to the vile instrument. Knowing who was the boss — Mother — Mr. McNally might want to instruct his butler to break a window and leave large muddy boot tracks across the carpet before contacting the authorities.

      No, I wasn’t afraid of the police.

      His mother’s money or no, McNally was a wealthy man, and wealthy men had their resources. Rich or poor, no man was fond of being made a fool of.

      Particularly by a woman.

      I hurried home and dismissed the cabbie. I roused the footman and told him to find me a cab, quickly. Letting the rest of the servants sleep, I stuffed the best of my possessions into only two trunks. The scented cedar box containing jewellery, as well as the pieces for possession of which I was forced to flee, went into a valise. I stuffed cash into envelopes for my staff. More than enough to make up for lack of notice, but also to ensure some degree of loyalty, hoping they wouldn’t sell me out to the first person who came calling.

      I ordered the cab to Angus’s school, where I roused the headmaster in the middle of the night. Angus was sent for and told he had ten minutes to pack his truck. The headmaster and his bony, nightgown-clad wife protested earnestly, something about the importance of strict regimen and rigorous attention to routine in the development of a young man’s character. I told them I’d leave a donation to the school, which went a long way to mollifying them,